Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA; Department of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA.
Am J Obstet Gynecol. 2021 Jul;225(1):83.e1-83.e9. doi: 10.1016/j.ajog.2021.01.004. Epub 2021 Jan 13.
Maternal mortality is higher among Black than White people in the United States. Whether Black-White disparities in maternal in-hospital mortality during the delivery hospitalization vary across hospital types (Black-serving vs nonBlack-serving and teaching vs nonteaching) and whether overall maternal mortality differs across hospital types is not known.
The aims of this study were to determine whether risk-adjusted Black-White disparities in maternal mortality during the delivery hospitalization vary by hospital types (this is analysis of disparities in mortality within hospital types) and compare risk-adjusted in-hospital maternal mortality among Black-serving and nonBlack-serving teaching and nonteaching hospitals regardless of race (this is an analysis of overall mortality across hospital types).
We performed a population-based, retrospective cohort study of 5,679,044 deliveries among Black (14.2%) and White patients (85.8%) in 3 states (California, Missouri, and Pennsylvania) from 1995 to 2009. A hospital discharge disposition of "death" defined maternal in-hospital mortality. Black-serving hospitals had at least 7% Black obstetrical patients (top quartile). We performed risk adjustment by calculating expected death rates using predictions from logistic regression models incorporating sociodemographics, rurality, comorbidities, multiple gestations, gestational age at delivery, year, state, and mode of delivery. We calculated risk-adjusted risk ratios of mortality by comparing observed-to-expected ratios among Black and White patients within hospital types and then examined mortality across hospital types, regardless of patient race. We quantified the proportion of Black-White disparities in mortality attributable to delivering in Black-serving hospitals using causal mediation analysis.
There were 330 maternal deaths among 5,679,044 patients (5.8 per 100,000). Black patients died more often (11.5 per 100,000) than White patients (4.8 per 100,000) (relative risk, 2.38; 95% confidence interval, 1.89-2.98). Examination of Black-White disparities revealed that after risk adjustment, Black patients had significantly greater risk of death (adjusted relative risk, 1.44; 95% confidence interval, 1.17-1.79) and that the disparity was similar within each of the hospital types. Comparison of mortality, regardless of race, across hospital types revealed that among teaching hospitals, mortality was similar in Black-serving and nonBlack-serving hospitals. However, among nonteaching hospitals, mortality was significantly higher in Black-serving vs nonBlack-serving hospitals (adjusted relative risk, 1.47; 95% confidence interval, 1.15-1.87). Notably, 53% of Black patients delivered in nonteaching, Black-serving hospitals compared with just 19% of White patients. Among nonteaching hospitals, 47% of Black-White disparities in maternal in-hospital mortality were attributable to delivering at Black-serving hospitals.
Maternal in-hospital mortality during the delivery hospitalization among Black patients is more than double that of White patients. Our data suggest this disparity is caused by excess mortality among Black patients within each hospital type, in addition to excess mortality in nonteaching, Black-serving hospitals where most Black patients deliver. Addressing downstream effects of racism to achieve equity in maternal in-hospital mortality will require transparent reporting of quality metrics by race to reduce differential care and outcomes within hospital types, improvements in care delivery at Black-serving hospitals, overcoming barriers to accessing high-quality care among Black patients, and eventually desegregation of healthcare.
在美国,黑人群体的孕产妇死亡率高于白人群体。在分娩住院期间,黑人群体与白人群体之间的住院内孕产妇死亡率差异是否因医院类型(服务黑人群体与非服务黑人群体医院以及教学医院与非教学医院)而有所不同,以及不同医院类型之间的总体孕产妇死亡率是否存在差异尚不清楚。
本研究旨在确定在分娩住院期间,经风险调整的黑人群体与白人群体之间的死亡率差异是否因医院类型而有所不同(这是对医院类型内死亡率差异的分析),并比较服务黑人群体的医院与非服务黑人群体的教学医院和非教学医院之间的住院内孕产妇死亡率,无论种族如何(这是对医院类型之间总体死亡率的分析)。
我们对来自美国加利福尼亚州、密苏里州和宾夕法尼亚州的 3 个州(1995 年至 2009 年)的 5679044 例分娩病例(黑人群体占 14.2%,白人群体占 85.8%)进行了一项基于人群的回顾性队列研究。出院时的“死亡”状态定义为住院内孕产妇死亡率。服务黑人群体的医院至少有 7%的黑人产科患者(处于前四分之一水平)。我们通过使用逻辑回归模型预测的风险调整预期死亡率来进行风险调整,这些模型纳入了社会人口统计学、农村性、合并症、多胎妊娠、分娩时的孕龄、年份、州和分娩方式等因素。我们通过比较医院类型内黑人和白人患者的观察到的死亡率与预期死亡率之间的比值来计算死亡率的风险调整风险比,然后检查不同医院类型之间的死亡率,无论患者的种族如何。我们使用因果中介分析来量化导致死亡率差异归因于在服务黑人群体的医院分娩的比例。
在 5679044 例患者中,有 330 例孕产妇死亡(每 100000 人中有 5.8 例)。黑人患者的死亡率(每 100000 人中有 11.5 例)高于白人患者(每 100000 人中有 4.8 例)(相对风险,2.38;95%置信区间,1.89-2.98)。对黑人群体与白人群体之间的死亡率差异进行检查后发现,经风险调整后,黑人患者的死亡风险显著更高(调整后的相对风险,1.44;95%置信区间,1.17-1.79),并且这种差异在每种医院类型内都是相似的。无论种族如何,比较医院类型之间的死亡率发现,在教学医院中,黑人群体与非黑人群体的服务医院的死亡率相似。然而,在非教学医院中,黑人患者在服务黑人群体的医院的死亡率显著高于非服务黑人群体的医院(调整后的相对风险,1.47;95%置信区间,1.15-1.87)。值得注意的是,与白人患者相比,黑人患者中有 53%在非教学、服务黑人群体的医院分娩,而只有 19%的白人患者在这些医院分娩。在非教学医院中,黑人群体与白人群体之间的住院内孕产妇死亡率差异的 47%归因于在服务黑人群体的医院分娩。
黑人患者在分娩住院期间的住院内孕产妇死亡率是白人患者的两倍多。我们的数据表明,这种差异不仅是由于每个医院类型内黑人患者的死亡率过高,还由于大多数黑人患者在非教学、服务黑人群体的医院分娩,导致非教学、服务黑人群体的医院的死亡率过高。要实现住院内孕产妇死亡率的公平性,需要通过按种族报告质量指标来透明地报告,以减少医院类型内的差异护理和结果,改善服务黑人群体的医院的护理服务,克服黑人患者获得高质量护理的障碍,并最终实现医疗保健的去种族化。